Sports
Florida State University Athletics
TALLAHASSEE – Florida State beach volleyball standouts Alexis Durish and Audrey Koenig were named AVCA First-Team All-Americans on Wednesday afternoon, earning recognition as two of the nation’s top players. This marks Durish’s first AVCA All-America honor, while Koenig previously earned AVCA Third-Team honors for indoor volleyball in 2024. They become the 18th and 19th Seminoles […]

TALLAHASSEE – Florida State beach volleyball standouts Alexis Durish and Audrey Koenig were named AVCA First-Team All-Americans on Wednesday afternoon, earning recognition as two of the nation’s top players.
This marks Durish’s first AVCA All-America honor, while Koenig previously earned AVCA Third-Team honors for indoor volleyball in 2024. They become the 18th and 19th Seminoles in program history to earn First-Team All-America honors, and the first FSU duo since 2023 to be selected to the top team in the same year.
“AK and Alexis are the embodiment of what it means to be an All-American,” said head coach Brooke Niles. “They’re high-character individuals whose success on the court is matched by their leadership and the example they set as elite teammates.”
Durish and Koenig compiled a 24-8 record on court one in 2025, defeating many of the nation’s top pairs. Their All-America honors add to an already impressive list of accolades, including CCSA Co-Pair of the Year, All-Conference First Team, All-Tournament Team, and Pair of the Week (Feb. 24, 2025).
For more information on the Florida State beach volleyball program, check Seminoles.com and follow us on social media at fsubeachvolleyball (IG) and @FSU_BeachVB (X).
Sports
Men’s Water Polo Welcomes Eight New Players in 2025 Class
Santa Clara University’s men’s water polo program is set to enhance its roster with eight incoming freshmen for the 2025 season. This impressive class brings a wealth of talent with diverse backgrounds spanning high school, club, and international play. Head coach Keith Wilbur expressed excitement about their potential, highlighting their work ethic and character. Notable […]
Santa Clara University’s men’s water polo program is set to enhance its roster with eight incoming freshmen for the 2025 season. This impressive class brings a wealth of talent with diverse backgrounds spanning high school, club, and international play. Head coach Keith Wilbur expressed excitement about their potential, highlighting their work ethic and character. Notable recruits include Ashton Brown, a center from Australia with national championship experience, and Jamie de Zwart, a Texas standout also named state MVP. Together, they aim to bolster the team’s competitiveness in the Western Conference.
By the Numbers
- Ashton Brown is a three-time national club champion and top scorer at various levels.
- Jamie de Zwart led his high school to a 32-0-1 perfect season and earned state MVP honors.
State of Play
- The incoming class is expected to fill critical positions and enhance team dynamics.
- Santa Clara aims to compete effectively in the Western Conference, targeting a championship run.
What’s Next
As preparation for the upcoming season begins, these recruits will integrate into training with returning players, setting the stage for competing in a challenging league. Their immediate contributions could play a pivotal role in achieving team goals.
Bottom Line
The addition of these eight freshmen is a strategic move for Santa Clara’s men’s water polo program, underscoring a commitment to enhance talent and competitiveness, positioning the team for potential championship success.
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PIAA announces playoff schedule for baseball, lacrosse, softball and volleyball
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New Truman volleyball head coach wants players to ‘make a difference’
Beth Patton, right, is the new head volleyball coach at Truman High School replacing David Gardner, who has resigned. Her daughters Kinsley, left, a 2024 Truman graduate, and Avery, a 2025 grad, both played volleyball at Truman. Avery will play volleyball this fall at Missouri S&T, where both girls will be attending college. Photo Credit: […]

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University of Pittsburgh
PITTSBURGH – Olivia Babcock and Serena Gray have earned a spot on the 2025 VNL (Volleyball Nations League) week one roster, announced by USA Volleyball on Friday afternoon. They are two of 14 athletes to compete at the first preliminary round stop in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (June 4-8). The duo are the first Panthers to be named […]

PITTSBURGH – Olivia Babcock and Serena Gray have earned a spot on the 2025 VNL (Volleyball Nations League) week one roster, announced by USA Volleyball on Friday afternoon. They are two of 14 athletes to compete at the first preliminary round stop in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (June 4-8). The duo are the first Panthers to be named to an active VNL Senior National Team roster.
Babcock took home silver with USA Volleyball at the NORCECA Pan American Cup Final Six last summer in the Dominican Republic. Gray competed at the 2023 Pan American Cup and earned a first-place finish, defeating host Dominican Republic.
The 2024 AVCA National Player of the Year and ACC Player of the Year had the most decorated season in program history in her sophomore campaign. Babcock was named the AVCA East Coast Region Player of the Year, an AVCA First Team All-American, Volleymag.com First Team All-American, First Team All-ACC, Pittsburgh NCAA Regional Most Valuable Player and an AVCA East Coast Region Team member.
Gray was an AVCA First Team All-American at Pitt and led the Panthers to back-to-back National Semifinal appearances. She was a two-time ACC Scholar-Athlete of the Year and All-ACC First Team recipient.
The VNL brings together the world’s top 18 teams for three action-packed weeks of preliminary play, with each team competing in four matches per week. Only the top eight teams will earn a spot in the Final Round, where a VNL title will be on the line.
USA Volleyball Release
Sports
Long Beach Athletes Set To Run In CIF State Finals Today – The562.org
The562’s cross country and track & field coverage is sponsored by Joe Carlson & Debbie Hughes. The 2025 track and field season will conclude tonight at the CIF State Finals, with 19 Long Beach entries set to compete. The meet begins with field events at 4:30 p.m. at Veterans Memorial Stadium on the campus of […]

The562’s cross country and track & field coverage is sponsored by Joe Carlson & Debbie Hughes.
The 2025 track and field season will conclude tonight at the CIF State Finals, with 19 Long Beach entries set to compete. The meet begins with field events at 4:30 p.m. at Veterans Memorial Stadium on the campus of Buchanan High School in Clovis.
With seven of the 11 total Wilson entries and a handful of high qualifiers, the Wilson girls are in good position to go for a three-peat. According to Rich Gonzalez from PrepCalTrack, Wilson is projected to score 46 points and win the girls’ title. Long Beach Poly is projected to land right behind them with 41 points.
Wilson’s Kaylin Edwards is the top qualifier in the girls’ 300m hurdles, one of three Long Beach runners in the event. It will be a competitive event with runners like Carlsbad’s Morgan Herbst, who set a state record last week at 39.95, breaking the 2001 mark set by Wilson alum Lashinda Demus. Edwards edged Herbst by one-hundredth of a second at the Mt. SAC Relays a month ago.
Edwards will also have stiff competition from San Diego’s Anisa Bowen-Fontenot in both the 110m hurdles and 300m hurdles. Bowen-Fontenot is the defending champion in the 100m hurdles and was the top qualifier on Friday, just one spot ahead of Edwards.
Wilson’s Wyland Obando was the top qualifier in the boys’ 800m and has won five of his eight 800m races this year. He’s only come in second to a California runner once—Poly Riverside’s Beckett Sullivan, who was the ninth-place qualifier from Friday.
It’ll be a unique meet without Long Beach runners in any of the sprinting events, and just one runner in the 400m—Wilson’s Kaedyn Burroughs in the boys’ race.
The defending state champion Long Beach Poly boys have slimmed down their entries since the CIF-SS meet, but they’ll look to pick up key points in the 4×100 where they were the top qualifier on Friday. Lynnox Newman will be the Jackrabbits’ only individual boys’ competitor, running in the 110m hurdles.
The Jackrabbits will have a pair of athletes in the girls’ field events where Jillene Wetteland and Joy Anderson both qualified in the high jump. Anderson has also come along as a talented hurdler and qualified for the 300m hurdles.
As usual, the Poly girls will be in both the 4x100m and 4x400m relays. The Jackrabbits won their heat in the girls’ 4x100m on Friday while Wilson was the top qualifier in the girls’ 4x400m.
Wilson (11 entries)
Girls’ 800: Shirayah Lewis-Williams
Girls’ 100 Hurdles: Kaylin Edwards
Girls’ 300 Hurdles: Saniah Varnado
Girls’ 300 Hurdles: Kaylin Edwards
Girls’ 4×400
Girls’ 4×800
Girls’ Long Jump: Loren Webster
Boys’ 400: Kaedyn Burroughs
Boys’ 800: Wyland Obando
Boys’ 4×400
Boys’ 4×800
Long Beach Poly (8 entries)
Girls’ 4×100
Girls’ 100 Hurdles: Kadence Bain
Girls’ 300 Hurdles: Joy Anderson
Girls’ 4×400
Girls’ High Jump: Jillene Wetteland
Girls’ High Jump: Joy Anderson
Boys’ 110 Hurdles: Lynnox Newton
Boys’ 4×400
Sports
USC Men Stack Wins At The NCAA West Track And Field Regional, Plus More
University of Southern California’s Garrett Kaalund holds up a qualifying ticket for the NCAA … More Outdoor Championships. Kaalund, a junior, ran the third-fastest 200 meter time in the world in 19.85 seconds. University of Southern California COLLEGE STATION, Texas—Garrett Kaalund situated in the blocks, bowed his head, and waited for the gun to sound. […]

University of Southern California’s Garrett Kaalund holds up a qualifying ticket for the NCAA … More
University of Southern California
COLLEGE STATION, Texas—Garrett Kaalund situated in the blocks, bowed his head, and waited for the gun to sound.
“The main thing that goes through my mind is to calm myself down,” he said.
In a blur, the University of Southern California junior, a San Antonio native who transferred to the Trojans’ program from Nebraska in 2025 following an impressive first two years of collegiate sprinting, crossed the line in a wind-legal 19.85 seconds, clocking the third-fastest 200 meter time in the world and the eighth-best NCAA performance in history on Friday at the NCAA West Track and Field First Round inside E.B. Cushing Stadium.
“It gives me a lot more confidence than I previously had,” Kaalund said. “Initially I felt as if I could definitely win nationals, but now I really kind of believe it instead of just saying it.”
Kaalund has quietly emerged this spring for the Trojans, claiming personal records in the 100 meters (9.93), 200 meters (19.85) and 400 meters (44.73). He finished fourth at the distance at indoor nationals in March, which followed an outdoor nationals bid with Nebraska in 2024.
Better yet, he capped off an impressive haul for USC, which secured two more automatic spots to the NCAA Outdoor Championships over the first two heats of the 200 meters and an array of additional national qualifiers, including relay teams in the 4×100 and 4×400, four athletes in the 100 meters and the top 400 meter performer at the NCAA West Regional.
The result was a strong indication that the Trojans, one of the most successful programs in NCAA history, have a viable shot to win an outdoor title in two weeks in Eugene.
The USC men haven’t won a men’s outdoor title since 1976.
VIRGINIA BEACH, VIRGINIA – MARCH 15: Jordan Anthony of Arkansas Razorbacks poses for a photo after … More
NCAA Photos via Getty Images
This Arkansas Star Secured A World-Leading Performance At The NCAA West Regional
On Friday, Jordan Anthony secured the world’s fastest 100 meter performance in 9.75 seconds.
Despite being slightly outside the requirements of a wind-legal race, it was the second-fastest all-conditions NCAA performance in history, only behind UTEP’s Obadele Thompson’s effort of 9.69 in 1996–though that was with a 5.0 meters per second wind and Anthony’s was a 2.1 mark.
The reigning national indoor champion at 60 meters wasn’t fazed.
“I’ve had the confidence, just not cockiness,” Anthony said afterward. “I know the work I put in day and night. So anybody who steps on the track with me, it’s F you mentality. I don’t care what you did two weeks prior. You got to re-do it. Like Coach Buck said, validate it.”
The effort marks an important line in the sand for Anthony, who’s arguably been the most consistent performer on the NCAA stage this season and was added to the Bowerman Watch List on May 22. With a wind-legal sub-10 time at the Mt. SAC Relays in April and then two SEC Outdoor titles in May in the 100 meters and 200 meters, Anthony could have felt the pressure on his back.
He didn’t.
“My pride and I,” he said. “I don’t know, man, there’s just a dog in me.”
Four men broke 10 seconds at Regional on Friday, including USC’s Taylor Banks (9.91), Iowa’s Kalen Walker (9.94) and Washington State’s Mason Lawyer (9.95). Walker was the only athlete to accomplish the feat with a wind-legal time.
The Big Ten champion also secured the first sub-10 performance of his career.
“I think as I get older, these big moments drive me to be better,” Walker said.
PARIS, FRANCE – AUGUST 05: James Corrigan of Team United States competes during the Men’s 3000m … More
Getty Images
BYU Steeplechase Veteran Looks To Avenge NCAA Loss In 2024
James Corrigan has been eyeing up a trip to the NCAA Outdoor Championships for months.
On Friday, the Brigham Young University junior advanced to nationals after a steady performance in the first heat of the 3,000 meter steeplechase in 8:31.79. New Mexico’s Mathew Kosgei led all performers with his 8:25.41 mark in the third section.
A year ago, Corrigan struggled to put together a quality effort in the NCAA final following a qualifying mark in the first round. But after solving those issues in the U.S. Olympic Trials and then qualifying for the Paris Olympics, Corrigan has been in a completely different heat space.
Behind strong training with the Cougars and a great relationship with BYU head coach Ed Eyestone, Corrigan says he’s more ready than he’s ever been.
“I was able to prove I can run rounds and prove that, I guess, my season last year wasn’t a fluke,” Corrigan said. “This year, I’m not worried in the least. I recognize what stopped me from performing how I could have and so I have just as much confidence as I did before last year.”
Portland Pilots Senior Matt Strangio Driven By His Late Father
University of Portland Matthew Strangio took control of the 5,000 meters a little earlier than expected on Friday at the NCAA West Regional.
“Probably took it out a little further than our coach would have liked,” said Strangio, who managed the pace and ultimately leaned on his strength to claim the NCAA West Regional in 13:25.98.
But that confidence was worth something, because Strangio – who ran a personal best time of 13:24.14 in April at the Stanford Invitational – had another gear over the final 800 meters, holding off California Baptist’s Valentin Soca and Iowa State’s Robin Kwemoi through the final straight away.
“Had a really good training block and since Stanford and have been pretty on it,” Strangio said. “I take myself against everybody anyways, so I wanted to come out here when the pace felt good.”
Behind the surface, though, Strangio has also been running with more meaning. The Pilot senior lost his father, Steven Strangio, after the NCAA Indoor Championships and has dedicated his performances since then to him.
“I know I run with him on my side,” he said. “I try to do it for him, but I also know he’s always wanted me to do it for myself.”
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